World: r3wp
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Geomol 21-May-2009 [3712] | How far is it from the suburbs to the center of the city? I live in the suburbs of Copenhagen, and it takes about half an hour with train or car to get to the center. I guess, the distances are greater where you live? |
Izkata 21-May-2009 [3713] | I'm in Bartlett, it's about 45 minutes to an hour on average by car. A couple times it's taken about an hour and a half, though. Also, I don't have my own car - there's 3 vehicles to share among 5 people in my family. |
BrianH 21-May-2009 [3714] | Yeah. I live on the north edge of the city, my parents live in a west suburb (Naperville, not the furthest west), and it's an hour drive each way. Between gas and tolls it costs me $12-16 to visit my parents. I have friends who live 260 blocks from me. |
Geomol 21-May-2009 [3715] | Is it common to use triain, metro and bus, or do eveybody travel by car? Anyone going by bicycle? |
Izkata 21-May-2009 [3716x2] | What, bicycle from the suburbs to the city? |
I prefer rollerblading for exercise anyway | |
Geomol 21-May-2009 [3718] | Yeah, or around the suburb or around the city? I sometimes take bicycle to center of Copenhagen, about 40-45 minutes. Many use bicycles in copenhagen. Paths for bicycles along most of the roads. |
BrianH 21-May-2009 [3719] | Some people bike in the city - there's bike lanes everywhere - but for the most part people either use cars or public trans. Suburban people mostly use cars - the suburbs are designed that way. |
Geomol 21-May-2009 [3720x2] | ok, typical image of traffic in copenhagen: http://livablestreets.info/share/copenhagen_cyclists.jpg What does it look like in Chicago? |
or http://www.recumbentblog.com/images/copenhagen-cyclists.jpg | |
BrianH 21-May-2009 [3722] | Owning a car is very expensive in Chicago because the traffic and parking rules are defined by the Department of Revenue - lots of bogus charges and tickets. |
Henrik 21-May-2009 [3723] | I suppose the amount of highrises in Chicago creates a different street environment than Copenhagen, that AFAIR is a very flat city. |
Geomol 21-May-2009 [3724] | Kind of the same is going on here. Parking is getting more and more expensive to get the cars out of the city. It's free to use the roads though. You only pay, if you cross the large bridge to go to Fyn and Jutland. I use a motorbike, train/bus or bike. It's free to park a motorbike, so less exensive. |
BrianH 21-May-2009 [3725] | People tend to either use cars or public trans, but less often both. Neighborhoods with easy access to public trans (particularly trains) tend to not have parking, and vice versa. I live in a rare neighborhood with both. |
Izkata 21-May-2009 [3726x2] | Or walking, but it generally seems too crowded for bikes |
at least in/around the Loop | |
BrianH 21-May-2009 [3728] | Yeah, loop traffic is a little to scary for your averave biker. That's why every bike messenger I know is likely clinically insane :) |
Geomol 21-May-2009 [3729] | Is a block a standard size? |
Izkata 21-May-2009 [3730x3] | Well, my roommate and a friend did bike from IIT to O'Hare and back once - from Midnight to about 8 AM |
How standard is standard size? | |
Er, what size is standard size? | |
Henrik 21-May-2009 [3733] | I often hear "a couple of blocks away" in US TV shows, but I have no idea how big a block is. :-) |
Izkata 21-May-2009 [3734] | A friend from Texas got confused once, because apparently we're one of the few places in the US that measures distance in units of time. I'd never even thought much of it. |
Geomol 21-May-2009 [3735] | Are all blocks 500 yards or something, or is it different from place to place? |
Izkata 21-May-2009 [3736] | The scale on Google Maps looks like most are around 400 feet, but there's the river that messes it up, and some locations have a slightly different layout... Unfortunately, that's the best I can do |
BrianH 21-May-2009 [3737] | 8 blocks = 1 mile. |
Geomol 21-May-2009 [3738x2] | Yes, Copenhagen is pretty flat: http://www.copenhagenet.dk/Images/KBH-Copenhagen.jpg Not like Chicago: http://www.fas.org/irp/imint/docs/rst/Sect6/chicago2.jpg :-) |
Our cities are not lined up like yours. Ours are just a mess of roads going in all directions. :-) It's because our cities are maybe 1000 years old, and the roads were never straighten. I've heard, some danes find the US way more practical and makes it easier to travel around. Others find our way more charming. | |
Izkata 21-May-2009 [3740] | Winding roads in a city make it more fun to explore - "Wait a minute, how'd we get over here?" |
BrianH 21-May-2009 [3741] | Most of the outer suburbs are laid out at random. The city is a grid, with some occasional diagonal weirdness for indian trails. |
Geomol 21-May-2009 [3742] | What the oldes parts of US cities? The city or suburbs? If it's the city, why wasn't the grid just continued? Or maybe the suburbs are old villages and the city came later? |
BrianH 21-May-2009 [3743] | Naperville came first, then Chicago. Many of the suburbs started out as villiages or farming communities - the rest are filler. The grid is no more than 150 years old at most. |
Geomol 21-May-2009 [3744x2] | Ok, I've found Naperville at Google maps, and you live north in what area? |
I've found Bartlett too, a little north of Naperville. | |
Henrik 21-May-2009 [3746] | Geomol, I think it's because of our road system that GPS is so popular. |
Izkata 21-May-2009 [3747] | Copenhagen Denmark? |
Henrik 21-May-2009 [3748] | yes |
Izkata 21-May-2009 [3749] | Looks like an interesting place.. And I can definitely believe that about GPS from the maps |
Geomol 21-May-2009 [3750] | :-) |
Henrik 21-May-2009 [3751x2] | I've only been there once. It was enjoyable, but I prefer my homeland a little west from there. :-) |
http://www.panoramio.com/photo/5297916 Close to what I would see if I looked out the window. Taken in the winter, so it doesn't look as good as in the summer. | |
BrianH 21-May-2009 [3753] | Geomol, I live in Chicago, on the north edge near the lake. My parents live in Naperville (moved there when they retired. |
Chris 21-May-2009 [3754x4] | H: I visited your part of Denmark once about as far back my memory goes, not exactly sure how close to where you are, but I have some vivid images of some beautiful places... |
Birmingham (Alabama) is even by US standards, a new city. Designed around the placement of a railroad junction where in the hills there was a confluence of iron ore, coal and limestone. It's a grid system as much as the hills flanking it permit. The hills - long ridges at the tippy-tail of the Appalachians - form a stark barrier between the town and the spidery suburbs. | |
It's definitely not cycle friendly (though I do every day) - the few cycle lanes that exist are like sick jokes with sudden dead ends and lines that traffic generally treat as optional, or parking lanes. | |
And of course, half the traffic are huge trucks or SUVs. And noone thinks twice about opening a car door on you as you pass a parked car... I expect every city you have to be agressive to cycle consistently. I do envy those that live in cities that encourage cycling - evident in the Copenhagen pics above... | |
Graham 21-May-2009 [3758] | One of the new initiatives to "fight" the depression here is to build a cycle way from the top of the country to the bottom. I expect though you'll still have to catch the ferry to get across Cook Strait. |
Maxim 21-May-2009 [3759x3] | funny, the town next to mine (8 miles away is called napierville :-) |
montreal claims to have the most bicycle paths in any north american city. we even are closing streets and completely removing parking downtown for bicycle lanes. note montreal is a 365 day/year bicycle city... that include when there are blizzards, litterally :-) they have winter tires with studs for sale during the winter :-) people are just nuts. | |
IIRC they are something like 500km of bicycle paths, but I could be really off. | |
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